Oil prices shrug, Russia strikes back, Mexican oil goes global [Recharge]
Oil prices barely moved on renewed US military action in Iraq; Souring Russia-EU relations means it could be a cold winter in Europe; Mexico moves ahead with opening its oil sector to foreign investment. Catch up on the week in global energy with Recharge.
Oil rig pumpjacks extract crude from the Wilmington Field oil deposits area near Long Beach, Calif. Oil prices barely moved late last week on US airstrikes in Iraq.
David McNew/Reuters/File
From oil prices to solar innovation to gas wars, each weekend Recharge examines the big ideas in global energy. .
Heating season: Russia's retaliatory sanctions against the West this week don't target energy, butÌý. Winter heating season begins in October, and it looks increasingly unlikely that Moscow, Kiev, and Brussels can come to an agreement to restore gas flows to Ukraine –Ìýand ensure transit of Russian gas to Europe. As the situation gets increasingly desperate,Ìý.
Leapfrog:Ìý. It's an opportunity to build from scratch 21st-century energy systems that are smarter and cleaner than the industrialized world's carbon-heavy grid. But this week's US-Africa summit demonstratedÌýit will not be easy to pursue African prosperity while also reining in runaway global emissions.
Petróleos internacionales: The overhaul of Mexico's energy industry is a bet that the shale boom can spread south of the Rio Grande.Ìý, following Iran, Iraq, and other oil states looking to revive lagging output with outside support. The move ends 75 years of monopoly and national pride for Petróleos Mexicanos, but it could be a boon for Mexico's economy andÌý.
In the pipeline
- Sunday, August 10: TELEVISION and THE INTERNET – President Obama’s Power Africa coordinator Andrew HerscowitzÌýÌýon Platts Energy Week. Also, Brookings Institution Senior Fellow John Banks will explain how Millennials are changing how utilities operate.
- Monday, August 11 to Tuesday, August 12: SANTA FE, N.M. and CARLSBAD, N.M. –Ìý, making a stop at DOE's Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in Carlsbad. WIPP isÌý.
- Ongoing: IRAQ – So far,Ìýoil prices have responded relatively quietly to US airstrikes on Iraqi insurgents, but any kind of prolonged intervention, or a spread of violence to the oil-rich south, will put upward pressure on oil prices.
Ìý
Drill deeper
Ìý[Reuters]
In an era of fracking, seismic exploration, and horizontal drilling, oil producers are returning to the Gulf of Mexico. "We are re-shooting all of our large fields to make sure that we haven't missed anything," one oil executive told Reuters.
Ìý[The Wall Street Journal]
Farmers in Kenya have banded together against a proposed wind farm, which is part of Obama's "Power Africa" program. In the wake of Obama's high-level US-Africa summit, local objections in Kenya and elsewhere demonstrate the difficulty of implementing energy programs on the ground.
Setting rivers free: As dams are torn down, nature is quickly recovering[º£½Ç´óÉñ]
Nearly 900 dams, erected to power the country’s machinery, store water, irrigate fields, or generate hydroelectric power, have come down in the past 25 years, writes Doug Struck. The trend toward river restoration is a far cry from the early 20th century lionization of dams as modern triumphs over nature.
Energy sources
- : "Natural gas production in the Marcellus Region exceeded 15 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) through July, the first time ever recorded"
- : "[Pennsylvania] left approximately 58,000 active wells (89%) uninspected in 2008; in 2013, ... [the state] inspected thousands more wells – but the growth in drilling and production meant that more than 66,000 active wells (83%) weren’t inspected."
- China's National Energy Administration, viaÌý: "China added 3.3 gigawatts of solar capacity in the six months ending June 30, double last year’s additions ... China now has 23 gigawatts of solar power supply, almost seven times as much as Australia."
Unplug
Amid record drought, Californians "go green."
–ÌýÌý/Ìý